part five :: the show
i'm not sure when i became a once a week blogger, but... seems like it's all i can manage these days. i feel like i have lot more to share - hmmm - hopefully next week will prove more possible.
so.... the show the show - the reason for my going to japan. 2 weeks of work [thank god we had help! i've never had/allowed someone to help me as much as i did for this show and let me tell you - a girl could get used to it]. all of the work [and i'm sorry i don't have pics of the other artist's work organized yet - i'll add them to my website in an installation section as soon as i can] in the show was labor intensive. what i was acutely aware of was how i was working on these projects that were to occupy a significant amount of space [several feet!] but i had to actually build and put them together in tiny little sections. one small action at a time. pin, repeat, paint, repeat [of course repeat ended up being a big theme for the whole trip, but i didn't know it yet].
the other thing that really sunk in this time was how intimate and also disconnected this process can be. countless hours spent literally 2 inches from a wall. occasionally bored to tears.... singing along with music... swapping stories with my helper.... and then - oh my god we're done. and then... oh my god i made that? the inevitable question - how did you do that? how does it feel to do that.... flustering in my answer - i'm not really sure. you just do it. and really i kind of forget the actual making part of it [otherwise i might never do it again].
the tank installation complete. remember when i was pondering color combos? it was for this. this is the second tank install i've done. the first time i did an argyle pattern [other time was plaid].
this is why this museum was so cool. shot from below. a little peek. sigh.
detail
the tanks made it into the paper :) !
downstairs [thankfully far away from the tanks] i did a doily installation. the space was just so inspiring. for the first time i thought about having the piece "start" somewhere and sort of disperse. so i started in the corner. i thought about snow falling [there was still snow on the mountains that were in sight of the museum]. i also had a glass case to work with. granted normally people put things IN the case - but i had been wanting to work with glass/reflections and the doilies for quite some time and this was my chance. the shadows that ended up IN the case were beyond what i could have hoped for. these pieces are ridiculously stupid to try and photograph, so... well.... i have to let that go.
one story about this piece. while i was working on it.... staring at walls. futzing with the minute alterations in the placement of each doily the curator of the show came down and stood next to me. he turned to me and he said. this is so japanese. you are so japanese. the space here. the space is just as important as the objects themselves. [this was of course 1/2 understood by me and 1/2 translated to me - i didn't know the word for space]. i literally just stopped and smiled at him. i felt as though that was the biggest compliment someone could have given me. space is something that is so hard to talk about. and he just got it. the negative space.
the right side - the way the walls interacted was just fantastic.
of course i did the corner wrap around thing
this is the "start". i also really overlapped the doilies this time.... think i might have to try that again....
detail of the mass
the glass
me painting on the glass
here we are talking to hipster architecture students from tokyo :D
ok friends. i have to get to the studio. i have to try and finish a piece for my show announcement.... oh and make the work for that show. ha ha. [show at little bird gallery in october]
i also posted on ship today.
AND.... caterine has set up a very cool muslin tote swap . go sign up if you are so inclined!
have a great weekend!
Comments
The doilies are just dreamy... so sensual.. like jellyfish.
you are amazing!!
just amazing...
especially how
both your pieces
don't just
work in the space,
they echo the space...
wow.
so very
japanese!
xoxox
You are amazing! Your work is so beautiful! I love how both pieces use the space so brilliantly. How did you ever figure it out and then package the whole thing? Your weekly post have been so lovely and rich that I don't mind at all.
Take care.
xoxo
Your work looks fantastic! It's so exciting to see your photos, I've thoroughly enjoyed your whole Japanese adverture.
Oh and what a huge installation effort on your part. Isn't it funny how you seem to forget how much time and effort installing work takes each exhibition and only get more ambitious with subsequent exhibitions.
xo lj
ps. Welcome to the I blog once a week (but wish I could more) club.
see you, g xo
(P.S. Did I mention already... LOVE IT!)
I love the doilies and the shadows on the glass. and my favourite image is the one with you painting them on glass.
for those of you asking for more info about the tank piece [and thanks to jenny for asking and forcing me to formulate the words]
OK – initially the tanks started as my way of thinking about masculine and feminine. How to make something so male into something more female. Hence the felt, the bright colors and the pattern. But then of course there are more layers. I hate tanks – I hate war – both are scary. So what better way to subvert them than this way? Cute felt, non-dangerous tanks – marching in a pretty and garish way instead of a harmful one. And then as we in this country have continued to be involved in a hideous war the thoughts continue with patterns repeating themselves – the ENDLESS nature of war and marching – not asking questions and simply following the designated pattern.
it's also about visual play – how do we read patterns? What happens if something small makes up a larger pattern? Where does the recognition shift/change. When is it a tank? When is it argyle [argyle has it's on manly implications that I'm subverting too].
and I think it's funny to have a woman playing with tanks. One by one. In a very laborious way. A very domestic way.
in case anyone is interested in my thoughts on the the doily piece here they are as well:
i'm thinking about altering our relationship to something that we consider very ordinary - or might even dismiss. doilies often connote "grandma" or speak of another era.
in a sense i want to update that idea. this is partially achieved by scale. by the sense of repetition. by removing the doily from how we normally view it [simply by placing in an "art" context"]. in a way i'm trying to monumentalize the doily [and by proxy pay homage to domesticity].
i'm also interested in pattern and space with these. and also how we perceive space. how 2-d and 3-d work for and against one another and how shadows are real and illusionistic.
finally i'm also interested in the idea of something becoming something else - so how do you read these? as snow? as flowers? as ghosts? i'm playing with layering both physically and hopefully conceptually.
i'm so interested in what the curator said to you about your work being so japanese. sure, your work is so connected to space, but have you ever thought about that in context to your heritage? does it feel connected to you?
xox
love you drawing the delicate doilies ... truly wonderful exhibition!!
her name is Joana Vasconcelos
some links from google
http://images.google.co.uk/images?hl=en&q=joana%20vasconcelos&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&um=1&sa=N&tab=wi
she became well known in the art world around here a few years back with a chandelier made out of tampons to which she called "the bride"